10 mg PT-141 reconstitution calculator
Add 2 ml of bacteriostatic water to your 10 mg vial. Enter your dose below to see how many units to draw on an insulin syringe.
By the DosingCalc editorial team. Numbers and dose ranges are checked against the sources listed on our editorial standards page.
A 10 mg vial of PT-141 is usually mixed with 2 ml of bacteriostatic water. That gives you a concentration of about 5.00 mg/ml. At a 1000 mcg dose, one 10 mg vial covers around 10 doses, taken As needed, 30-45 min before. 10mg is the most common vial size for PT-141. The calculator above is set to the 10 mg vial. Enter your target dose (anywhere from 500 to 1750 mcg is typical) and it shows the exact number of units to draw on an insulin syringe. After mixing, keep the vial at 2-8°C refrigerated and finish it within 28 days. Unopened, a 10 mg vial stays good for up to 24 months. When you add the water, run it down the inside wall of the vial. Swirl, do not shake.
Other PT-141 vial sizes
How to reconstitute 10mg PT-141
- 1Gather supplies: 10mg PT-141 vial, bacteriostatic water, 2ml syringe, insulin syringe, alcohol swabs.
- 2Wipe the stoppers of both the peptide vial and bac water with an alcohol swab. Let dry.
- 3Draw 2ml of bacteriostatic water into the syringe.
- 4Inject the water slowly down the inside wall of the PT-141 vial. Do not spray directly onto the powder.
- 5Gently swirl the vial until the powder is fully dissolved. Never shake.
- 6Store at 2-8°C refrigerated. Use within 28 days. Use the calculator above to determine how many units to draw for each dose.